logo
Cocke County Mayor aims to retain local graduates through economic investment

Cocke County Mayor aims to retain local graduates through economic investment

Yahoo02-06-2025
COCKE COUNTY, Tenn. (WATE) — Cocke County Mayor Rob Mathis is working to help the county capitalize on its location and attract future investors.
Mathis recently attended the annual summit of the Tennessee Valley Corridor, a nonprofit organization spans Tennessee, Alabama, Kentucky, Virginia and North Carolina. It is focused on attracting investments related to fields like technology, science, and national security.
Morristown hosts the Tennessee State Disc Golf Championships
'The thought of was kind of the second Manhattan Project, but in a much broader scope that goes all the way from Birmingham through Huntsville, Alabama, the Space and Rocket Center, Oak Ridge, Chattanooga, Knoxville and then into Virginia and beyond,' Mathis explained. 'Cocke County sits right astride that corridor because it flows right beside I-40.'
Despite its proximity to I-40, Mathis told 6 News that Cocke County has yet to take advantage of the opportunity.
'If we can offer them something on the low-end or something that pays on high-end but also rewards them for going out and getting an education,' Mathis said. 'Let's say a kid wants to get a degree in engineering, a degree in finance, a degree in you name it. Whatever those fields are, we have to create opportunities for those young people to stay as well. So that's what this does.'
Deadline to apply approaching for Tennessee governor's recovery fund
Mathis looking to change this as the county is finishing up construction on an industrial park. Mathis believes construction will wrap up next year.
'We're currently in the process of running sewer, so that's kind of the last big piece. But we have got about eight good sites, flat sites for new employers to come into that park.' Mathis said.
This new venture is to not only help the county recover from Helene, but continues to propel forward.
▶ See more top stories on WATE.com
'We're excited about this opportunity and to be able to move forward as a county and this is not just about recovery from a disaster, this is about regaining and enhancing the momentum we had before the disaster happened,' he said.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Five things you need to know today, and your personal favorites
Five things you need to know today, and your personal favorites

Business Journals

time2 days ago

  • Business Journals

Five things you need to know today, and your personal favorites

Happy Wednesday, Cincinnati! Here are five business news stories you need to know to get your day underway. 1) CVG hires construction firm for $6M project Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky International Airport has hired Hebron-based Harper Co. to reconstruct one of its major taxiways. The project will cost nearly $6 million and will include pavement reconstruction and electrical system upgrades. Harper was the only company that bid on the work, Chris Wetterich reports. The airport expects the project to wrap up by the end of the year. GET TO KNOW YOUR CITY Find Local Events Near You Connect with a community of local professionals. Explore All Events 2) First Financial acquiring out-of-state bank to triple branches there First Financial will acquire BankFinancial for $148 million, which will triple its Chicago branches to 26 total. Steve Watkins reports the deal will add $1.4 billion in assets to First Financial, which has $18.6 billion in assets and 128 banking centers in Ohio, Indiana, Kentucky and Illinois. Prior to the acquisition, First Financial had seven branches in the Chicago area but has been interested in expanding in the market for years. 3) Historic former restaurant, beer garden to be redeveloped Corryville Community Development Corp. plans to purchase the historic Mecklenburg Gardens building with $1.2 million in tax increment financing funds. The restaurant and beer garden closed in 2023 after 158 years. It has since sat vacant and deteriorating, Brian Planalp reports. Cincinnati City Council will have to approve the use of TIF funds. Upon approval, the Corryville CDC plans to bring an operating restaurant and brewery back to the space after renovations. Do you like Five Things? Make sure to subscribe to our Morning Edition emails so you have it in your inbox each day. 4) Health system to offshore administrative jobs Bon Secours Mercy Health is planning to build a support center in the Philippines, expanding its existing presence in the country, but cutting jobs in the U.S. as a part of a new global strategy. The offshored roles will include human resources, finance, supply chain and other administrative functions. The number of jobs impacted is unclear, according to the health system's chief administrative officer, who said it will be a small percentage of its domestic workforce. Mercy Health hopes the move will maximize operational efficiencies. 5) Growth fund with Cincinnati ties raises $238M O.H.I.O Fund raised $238 million while making 19 investments across the state, two in Greater Cincinnati companies, Watkins reports. Headed by Mike Venerable and Jill Meyer, the fund raised money from more than 106 investors including high-net-worth individuals, institutions and family offices of wealthy individuals, financial institutions, foundations and other corporations. This day in history 1942: The Manhattan Project commences, marking the start of the large-scale effort to develop an atomic bomb. What I'm reading "The Uptown Local" by Cory Leadbeater What I'm listening to Chappell Roan's new single "The Subway" "August" by Flipturn What I'm watching "The Summer I Turned Pretty" on Amazon Prime Video I've also been watching a lot of movies, including newer releases like "Jurassic World: Rebirth," "Freakier Friday," "Happy Gilmore 2," "Final Destination Bloodlines," "Sinners," the live action "Lilo & Stitch" and "Nonnas." I saw most in theaters with only two Netflix exceptions. My AMC Stubs A-List has been put to good use over the last few months. Your favorite of all time For the past year, I've felt like I was in the worst music drought ever. I find myself recycling the same playlists, same albums, same artists over and over again. I think I know the words to every song I have ever heard at this point. We've had a few music conversations in the Courier newsroom, notably around the time when "A Complete Unknown," the Bob Dylan biopic came out and a few editors and reporters declared their dislike for Dylan, Bruce Springsteen and other similar artists. I won't name names to save my colleagues the grief. I'd say I consume more music than the average listener. I listen to everything. From pop, rock, indie and rap to country, metal, folk, jazz and every sub-genre in between. Looking at my most recent Spotify plays, artists include Lorde, the Red Hot Chili Peppers, St. Vincent, Norah Jones, Mac DeMarco, Doechii, Modern Baseball, Taylor Swift, Turnstile, Steely Dan and Third Eye Blind. While all of these artists are fabulous, I need new stuff. So my question to you, Business Courier readers, is what is your favorite album of all time? Or, is there an artist or song you have on repeat right now? I'm open to any and all genres from any decade. Email me at lschwartz@

Trump Is Squandering the Greatest Gift of the Manhattan Project
Trump Is Squandering the Greatest Gift of the Manhattan Project

New York Times

time5 days ago

  • New York Times

Trump Is Squandering the Greatest Gift of the Manhattan Project

The 80th anniversary last week of the atomic bombings that helped end World War II came at a most peculiar time. That is in part because we can't mark that anniversary without also noting the astonishing Manhattan Project that built atomic weapons. The Manhattan Project was a towering achievement, one of the great stories of human effort and accomplishment. Yet the Trump administration has been systematically dismantling the culture of research that the Manhattan Project and World War II bequeathed us, a culture that propelled American prosperity. At no other time in modern history has a country so thoroughly turned its back on its core national strengths. The very elements that made the Manhattan Project such a success are today under assault. With devastating cuts to science and health research, the administration is turning its back on a history of being powered and renewed by the innovation and vision of immigrants. What America may find is that we have squandered the greatest gift of the Manhattan Project — which, in the end, wasn't the bomb but a new way of looking at how science and government can work together. That the Manhattan Project happened is itself a minor miracle. For nearly two years, the U.S. military seemed to want nothing to do with the effort of inventing an atomic bomb. From 1939 to 1941, a ragtag group of mostly Jewish refugee scientists from Hitler's Europe, including Albert Einstein, approached the government and met with military officials. The scientists educated them on the discovery of nuclear fission, its implications for war and their fears that Hitler would develop an atomic bomb first. The military brushed them off. 'The colonels kept rather aloof,' the physicist Eugene Wigner recalled after one such meeting in October 1939, as Hitler took Poland. 'They were friendly, they smiled, but they never expected to see a working atomic bomb in this world.' Want all of The Times? Subscribe.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store